![]() ![]() Then the icons got customized individually by each good-doing company, with no standardization. Then a helpful student told me that even one molecule of food on a recyclable piece of food packaging could destroy the whole batch. Then they stopped listing what went in which bin with words, just icons. Then “garbage” became “landfill.” Then a second category of recyclable was added. Then they added another category: Recycling, composting, garbage. Then bus-your-own-table places like Panera started recycling. I’m trying to do the right thing here but meet me partway maybe?) (Until they switched the green bin for a blue one, confusing me forever, and also these color-for-substance codes vary by municipality, and also at some point the second garbage became a recycling bin. Then they added a green bin, which was for aluminum cans, glass bottles, and newspapers. Here’s how garbage used to work: There were two big bins by the garage, and you put the stuff in them that you wanted taken away from your house, and once a week some people came by with a truck and emptied them. So I will remain televisionless, but at least I got half a column out of it. I did not have to buy one TV for ESPN and Food Network, plus a bunch of adapters and pirating cables to drag in NBC and Animal Planet. Comcast can suck it and DirecTV eventually found a place of not being much better, but at least they were willing to let me watch the five or 10 channels in which I was interested on a single television. This means that your TV, in addition to being an unintentional announcement of brand loyalty, also won’t play things you might want to watch if they aren’t on a compatible network. Plus, as I understand it (which I may not, but if I go that route the complaining wouldn’t be nearly as fun) Netflix and Amazon and Hulu and Chromecast and so on don’t like to talk to each other. I hate the phone, I hate that increasing numbers of businesses will not interact with you without the phone, I hate the loyalties required from the producers, and to add the TV to this list of dismay is more than I can handle. Regular readers - all three of them - know how I feel about the smartphone. Then I have to let the fancy TV connect to my smartphone. ![]() If I want one of the fancy TVs cheaply, I have to decide (I am told) which streaming platform I want to watch. We hope it helps you organize your life in a beautiful way.The catch is that TVs have software now, and that software does not work with all forms of media. Easily filter your notes with the flexible tagging system. Create hierarchical folders (subfolders). Sync your information between your devices. ![]() Go Pro today and enjoy the following features: Subscribe to Notelife Pro for $20 annually and you'll also help support further development on features that make getting information into Notelife easier. Notelife Pro offers advanced features which can be unlocked via a single subscription that covers all of your devices. Let's just say that we've got you covered. Your privacy is important to us, so we make sure your information is always encrypted whether it's stored on your computer, in the cloud, or on its way to the cloud. Notelife uses iCloud for syncing so you don't have to trust your private information to yet another 3rd party. Your information syncs seamlessly between your devices via iCloud ensuring that you have the latest information with you at all times. Notelife is available for iOS and macOS devices so you can always have it with you. Rather, Notelife makes it effortless to store anything and find anything whenever you need it. Nor do you have to have a degree in engineering to sync your notes between all of your devices. You don't have to remember any obscure formatting codes (like Markdown syntax) to format your notes. In fact, it's designed for every day people like you and me. Notelife is a premium note manager that goes beyond the basics, but this doesn't mean it's hard to use. ![]()
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